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Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

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Page 1: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Pierre DesrochersUniversity of Toronto - Geography

Page 2: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Introduction

1) Geography & Economic Development

2) Silicon Valley & Clusters- SV: Facts & Myths- Replicating SV & Creating Clusters

3) Case against Regional Economic Specialization

Conclusion

Page 3: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography
Page 4: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

First, back to the basics

of regional economic development…

Page 5: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Economic Activity in a Spiky World (Florida et al.)

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Canada

Nordhaus et al.

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USA

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France

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Russia

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India

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Japan

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SCHEDEL, Hartmann , Nuremberg, 1493

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Towns = crossroads

Conventional explanations:

Trade (marketplace)

Urbanization economies

Page 15: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

« Where there is city growth, humanity moves forward…;

Élisée Reclus (1895)

Where they flounder, civilization itself is in danger. »

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Page 17: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

1990s

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“In Russia…

there are an immense number of villages

each of which carries on only one branch of production,

or even only a part of one.”

Alfred Marshall, Principles of Economics (1890)

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« There are for instance over 500 villages devoted to various branches of woodwork;

one village makes nothing but spokes for the wheels of vehicles;

another nothing but the bodies and so on;

and indications of a like state of things are found in •histories of oriental civilizations •chronicles of medieval Europe »

Page 20: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Combination of factors

specialized labour pool

localized economies of scale (specialized suppliers & infrastructure)

knowledge spillovers

research institutions

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Chicken (cities/clusters)

or Egg (economic development)?

Tautology (cities/clusters & agglomeration economies)

Proximity & smart people (and then what?)

Page 22: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

State Vs Markets: Decades of experience(s)

What have we learned?

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Page 24: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Silicon Valley

Page 25: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Early decades 20th C: •San Francisco - radio technology & maritime hub;•Local businesses: Federal Telegraph (1909), Magnovox (1917), Heintz & Kaufman (1921), Kolster Radio Corp (1928), Litton Engineering Laboratories (1932), Eitel & McCullough (1934)

Mid 20th C: •Cluster of vacuum tube manufacturers•Stanford U & Frederic Terman •Bill Shockley & transistors (left Bell Lab NJ for Palo Alto – family & business (« buzz ») reasons•Spin-offs: « Traitorous Eight » - Fairchild semiconductors•« Fairchildren » and others: Intel, H-P, Apple…

Page 26: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography
Page 27: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Growth processes?•Same as elsewhere (Detroit/Akron/Italy/Germany)

Government Interventions?•Military contracts (but typically building on existing firms)

University?•Stanford University – applied and very good / best

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Many • policy makers • intellectual entrepreneurs• real estate promoters

have tried to create• “growth poles”• “high-tech parks”• “industrial districts,”• “clusters”

Charles de Gaulle

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(1955) “Note sur la notion de pôle de

croissance,” Économie Appliquée 8: 307-320

« Growth Poles » climax: 1965 – 1975

Page 30: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography
Page 31: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Political and Economic/Geographic Logics incompatible…

« Targeting » and « Planned External Economies of Scale » don’t deliver…

Spontaneous « Growth Poles  » kept appearing…

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Page 33: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Clusters (pro-specialization, but with nuances…)

1990

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Successes few and far between

Main factors of success•Prior locations (near thriving areas)•Formalization of spontaneous growth•Exceptional locations & sustained public efforts (Raleigh-Durham; Sophia-Antipolis), but mostly relocations of large firm operations

Most overhyped factor:•“World Class” academic institutions

Page 37: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

What is a cluster?

Politicians picking winners? stealing from Peter to pay Paul everyone targets same trendy industries knowledge of time and place

Politics (corruption) as usual… selection of locations favored businesses

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Urbanization economies

Multiplier effect

Stability & resiliency

Jacobs’ externalities

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Regional Multiplier

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Putting all eggs in one basket?

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Local Economy

Specialized Diversified

Monopoly

Several small

│││││││││││││││││││││││││││

____________________________________________Firms

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Page 44: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

+

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=

Page 46: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Case for Jacobs’ SpilloversIf innovation = new combinations; then diverse region = more opportunities; then more opportunities = more innovativemore innovative = more economically

prosperous

Can you plan “diversity” and “Jacobs spillovers”?

• Can you plan spontaneity?• Growth poles experience• How does cross-fertilization actually occur?

Page 47: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

work experience individuals acquire and sectors in which know-how will likely be transferred

network of knowledgeable people

tacit knowledge

agglomeration economies

Page 48: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography
Page 49: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Alceus ~ 600 BC

“Not houses finely roofed nor the stones of walls well built nor canals nor dockyards make the city,

but men able to use their opportunity.”

Page 50: Pierre Desrochers University of Toronto - Geography

Crucial (except for world cities)

Reasonably affordable housingGood schoolsDecent infrastructureSafety/security (personal – property rights)Entrepreneurial mindsetReasonable taxation and regulation

Not crucialLocation (transport, weather)Public transportationWorld class universities Cluster or Silicon Valley-inspired policies…